THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1929 | ~ Social and Personal Mrs. Ed. Randall and children, Mrs. Thomas Banbury is spend- ing a few days in Thorah, where she is the guest of her son, Mr. Herbert Banbury, and Mrs. Ban- bury. * * » Mr, and Mrs. W. Smithson and Miss B. Smithson, Oshawa Blvd, have returned from spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Redpath, Peterboro, where they attended the 014 Hope Week. * Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnston and children visited friends in Wood ville, Ont., recently. * * * Mr, and Mrs. John Chalmers and son, lan, are guests of Mrs. T.. Wal- lace, Peterboro, for Old Home Week in that city. Mr, and Mrs. George Hazlett, Ritson road south, were among the Oshawa people attending the func- tions in connection with Old Home Week in Peterboro. * * * Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Heard and children spent the week-end and holiday with friends in Woou ville, * * * Mr. George Weir and children, Richmond street,. were guests of friends in Peterboro for a few days this week. . * * * Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Mitchell spent a few days in. Peterbuiv, where they took part in Old Home Week there, n Mr. Martin Byrne, Jr., spent the week-end and holiday at his home in Union Creek, Ont. * * * Mr. Henry Allan is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Henry, Peter- boro, for a few days this week. * % * Miss Leone Wallace, Agnes' t., is spending her vacation in Sharon, Pa., and Cleveland, Ohlo. * »* » Mrs. W. G, McFarlane and daughter, Gloria, Centre street, are leaving to visit relatives in Pontiac, Michigan, * * * Miss Thelma Elliott and Miss McLaughlin, of Paris, are guests this week of the former's sister, Mrs. W. J.4McLaity, Simcoe street North. MEE Congratulations are being ex tended to Miss Florence Vickers, King street east, on passing the 'Elementary piano examinations of the Toronto Conservatory of Music. Ruth and Ross of Bothwell; Mrs. Harry -Pingle and son, Arthur, of Windsor; Mrs. Albert Cox and Mise Florence Cox, Elgin street east; Miss Isobel Downey, Division St.; Mrs. Irvin Foster, of Bowmanville; Mr. and Mrs. H, W. Nichols, Mr, and Mrs. Herbert Nichols, of Cour- tice; Mrs. W. Logue, of Harmouy, were guests of Mr and Mrs, F. Aldsworth, Solina Station, on Wed- nesday. * * x Mr. Fred Spafford spent the week-end with his mother in Picton. * + % Mr, and Mrs. C. P, Gillen, and children, of Saskatoon, are visiting the formér's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Gillen, Elgin street. * % x Mrs. R. W. Dixon and Miss Hazel Dixon, King street west, ana ars, Cruikshank, of Cobourg, leave to- day on a motor trip to the Pacific coast, visiting in Vancouver, . They will be absent from the city for the next two months, x Mr. George Burns, Ritson road north, spent a few days this week in Peterboro, where he attended Old Home Week, * * * Mrs. W. W. Park, Simcoe street south, has returned from spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Kilmer, in St. Thomas, * »* * Mr. Walter Elliott is visiting Dr. and Mrs, G. T. McKeough, "Erie Manor," Chatham, this week, . Ld LJ Mrs. 8S. Storie and daughter, An- ne, and son, Donald, King street east, are spendire the esgmmer months at their enttage at Williams Point, Lake Scugog, LJ * LJ Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Culling and family, Bruce streeet, and MY. and Mrs, George Roughley are holi- daying at Long Island, New York City. ov» Mrs. Morcomb, Er., of Omemee, is spending a few wecks with friends in the city, * 0% Mr. and Mrs. Russel McGill were guests of Mr, and Mrs. Samuel Mec- Gill, Janetville, for a few days, *. x 0% Messrs. John Drinkle 'and Ar- thur Drinkle, Gibbs street, visited friends in Peterboro this week. * * * Mr. Bryce Grant spent a few days with his parents, Mr, and PATTERN PURCHASE COUPON To The Oshawa Daily Times Pattern Department, wa, Ont, Enclosed find oc..cconneensareasises cents. Please send patterns listed below: size Price, 20 cents each. coin. Wrap coin carefully, Mrs. W. D. Grant, Bohcaygeon, this week. : till it dissolves; Sunlight Dissolves Freely The less real soap in the bar, the longer the wait for suds . : . and it's the suds that do the cleansing. With Sunlight, the all-pure soap, the suds are made instantly . . . pure soapy suds which cleanse more clothes than ordinary suds, yet ate so mild in action that they positively cannot harm hands or fabrics. The $5,000 Sunlight Guarantee on ev carton means real ecomomy -- longer life to your clothes-- protection to your bands. for this pattern, cents additional for a copy of our Fashion Magazine. with . delightful styles, smart ensembles and cute designs for the kiddies. ITS COMFY AND SMART Scalloping gives new aspect to brown linen shorts that button to comfortable with open V-neckline, that chooses natural colored linen. and cuffs are made of the brown linen, any wee lad of 1, 2, happy. white cotton rep blouse, blue wool jersey with tan, yellow linen with white, French grey cot- ton broadcloth with pale blue, ana plain white pique with collar and cuffs of pink are so attractive, and made at a small outlay. 4-year size, 1 yard of 32-inch ma- terial, cuffs and § yard of 32-inch mater- ial for waist is sufficient. cents in stamps or coin (coin pre- ferred). long-waisted blouse Collar, tie Style No. 405 would make and 4 years Nile green chambray with French In the for trousers, collar and Price 20 Wrap coin carefully, We suggest that when you send you enclose 10 It's just filled including Lowes friends here recently. * kw is visiting her sister, Sheehy, Peterboro, this week. in Fenelon Falls for this week. Mrs. Ernie Hannah and Miss Madge Hannah are guests of Mrs, H, A. Sisson, week. Peterboro, for the * x George Lowes and of East Emily Mr. Mr. P, visited Mrs. W. R, Hunter, Mary street, Mrs. J. K. * * * Mr. Clark Benson visited friends a few days * * * Mr. Reg. Taylor spent the week- end and holiday at his home in Bobcaygeon. . ® * ow Mrs. S. Shaw, Margaret and Russel Shaw, Mill street," spent a few days in Peterboro this week Orange Blossom F773 oy! ang OTRAUB W/V RINGS ~--the ideal of all that Js Sine nd new cr td. ol. hs fidelity to highest quality and a fine- ness of finish and design heretofore unapproached. May we show you the combination ( pictured above -- an unusual value. §) Set with fine quality diamond and five stone wed- Bre 0] D. J. BROWN 10 King St. West Phone 189 NURSES SHOULD NOT BE GOSSIPY Professor of Surgery Praises Operating Room Tech- nique Now Shown By Nurses in Training Toronto, July 4.--"During the past few years operating room tech- nique in the hospital has reached the highest peak it has attained anywhere in the surgical world," Dr. W. G. Gallie, recently appointed professor of surgery at the Univer- sity of Toronto, declared at the graduating exercises of the train- ing school for nurses of The Hos. pital for Sick Children, "Never have I received assist. ance from undergraduate nurses 1m the operating room to equal thdt I have received from you," he sus, addressing the graduatir class. "The nursing profesfion has risen almost contemporaneously with the rise of surgery," Dr. Gal- lie said. "Many a pretty young thing have T seen turn white on her first day in the operating room, but before long she is as cool as an iceberg as she takes command. "Tact 1s the most important quality of a nurse in private nurs- ing," he continued. "She must see and hear but not repeat. A gos- #ipy nurse is as bad as a. gossipy doctor--a disgrace to the profes- sion. * PLANS BEING MADE FOR STREET FAIR The monthly meeting of the Women's Association of the North Simcoe church was held in the church on Wednesday afternoon, July 3. In the absence of the presi- dent, Mrs. Battle, the meeting was convened by the honorary presi- dent, Mrs. A. M. Irwin. A hymn was sung and psalm 23 repeated in unison, after which business was discussed. Arrangements are being made for the church street fair to be held on Thursday, August 22, A home cooking booth will be one of the many features of the fair. Tea was served hy Mrs. Keel's group and a short social time spent, The next meeting will be held one week earlier, July 31. The meeting closed with prayer. KNEW HIS ANIMALS Rastus had taken Mandy to the circus menagerie and was having a great time explaining all about the animals to his girl, The Women's Corner For Anything of Interest to the Homemaker and the H In the region where pineapple is consumed in the greatest quantity one may never see it sliced straight across, because that leaves the hard centre, which, however, may be cut out and put through the food chopper for its juices. Instead of the slices across which can be at- tractive when cut almost as thin as papers, lengthwise bars or fingers can be made and these are some- times eaten out of hand like an ap- ple. At any rate they are so eaten by the common people of Cuba. Al- s0 we canb uy cans of the pineap- ple fingers nowadays. r In preparing pineapple for salad use we can cut a thick slice, then slice this in thin little bits or in dice, and get it, perhaps, in the most attractive shape for this use. Pineapple served as an appetizer is frequently cut in little cones, or what are sometimes called bracts, which can be arranged variously on an attractive plate with a phyra- mid of sugar in the centre of the plate. These pieces in the shape of a pyramid are easy to get then from the pineapple, because they can be broken out with a fork, beginning at the bottom of the fruit and taking an eye at a time. One discovers in doing this that the pineapple is really made up of pyramidal sections, each extending to the heart of the fruit. These with the sugar are considered a very pretty and delicious introdue- tion for a dainty or ladies' lun- cheon." The finest June strawberries in the hulls are often served in this same fashion as a beginner for a dainty luncheon and these may be used alternately with the pineapple, In order to get a cone of suguar for the centre of the plate, in ef ther case, we can pack confection- er's sugar into a small glass or paper cone, invert it on the plate and it will hold {ts shape. Instead of using a fork in cutting a pine- apple into bracts, perhaps we will be more successful if we use a sharp and rather long knife, slant. ing the knife in to make the point. Helpful Hints Linen should be quite damp for ironing and should be ironed com- pletely dry. Otherwise the pieces will wrinkle when drying. To ae a perfect job with napkins and tablecloths they should be ironed on both sides. If there is embroid- ery on a linen piece lay it on a sor cloth, with the right side down, and iron on the wrong side until dry. This will make the embroidery stand out, x x» A piece of newspaper laifl in the sink strainer before greasy water is poured into the sink will gather and hold the grease. * » To your ordinary meat loaf, before baking, add a teaspoon of cclery salt and two cups of chopped celery, and see what a delicious novelty you will have. I Old-fashioned stove blacking mixed with water and with a small piece of bluestone added makes a polish that will stay for a long time. When washing curtains always soak them overnight in water to which a handful of salt has been added. Then wash them out in cold suds before putting them in warm water. a Rub the inside of your kitchen win- dows with glycerine after washing them and they will not steam up. * * a a a It has been said that when baking cookies it saves time to bake them all in one sheet and cut them after. * * * When making cream pie of any sort, make an extra quantity of the filling for the next day's dessert. Serve as pudding or custard. It may also be used as filling of layer cake. Offic Boy: "May I get off this af- ternoon, sir ,about 2.30?" Personnel Officer: "Whose funeral is it to be this time, James?" Office Boy: "Well, to be honest, the way the morning papers have it doped out it looks like: it's going to be the home team's again--Royal Arcanum Bulletin. If we like the old-fashioned paper. thin slices of pineapple we can use those in the same way around a cone of sugar. To some of us they will seem prettier than the bracts. It is easy to get a little pineapple just by shredding a single dice, or we may shred the whole of a pine. An old-fashioned way to do this is to first wash the pineapple and wipe it dry, then to hold the top firmly in the left hand and peel thef ruit by slicing from the top to the bottom, The "plume" is left in as a handle. At this point we could, instead of shredding the pineapple, cut it into the bars and fingers, but first in any case we would remove the eyes, since the peeling rarely takes them out en- tirely. In peeling the pineapple it is best to have the fruit in a plat ter or dish so that none of the juice will be lost, Wehn ready to shred hold it firmly by the top and pu: a silver fork through the flesh, in- serting it to the core before pulling out and down, To shred a single slice hold it firmly on a plate with one fork and shred it with another. Pineapple juice can sometimes be diluted a half with cold water and readily improved if it is sweetened as so diluted. After shredding the pineapple and adding water and sugar to taste, it is then best to chill it fo rat least two hours. Some people like to serve a fruit salad in a pineapple shell, Tastes differ as far as this is concerned. In preparing the shell cut the pine- apple in half lengthwise, plume and all, then cut out the core and shred the fruit out with a fork, That is only one of the ways it can be pre- pared. You will derive far more satisfaction from SALADA than you will from cheap tea 'Fresh from the gardens' Marriage of Editor of Chatelaine Soon Toronto, Ont., July 4 (By the Can- adian Press)--Miss Anne Elizabeth Wilson, niece of Mrs, Lloyd Harris of Brantford and daughter of the late Robert Burns Wilson and Mrs, Wil- son, and Victor Blochin of Aurora, late lieutenant in the Imperial Rus- sian Grenadier Artillery and son of M.P. de Blochin and the late Madame A. de Blochin, are to be married on July 6 in' Knox college chapel. Miss Wilson is well known among Toronto writers, and has been editor of "The Chatelaine" since it was founded a year or so ago. She is also the au- thor of a book of poems "Eager Footsteps." SHE NEEDS 15 PAIRS OF SHOES They still remember in a leading Fifth avenue store when women used to buy a pair of shoes and ask to have heel and toe plates put on them, thus ending the shoe prob- lem until the following vear, Wo- men of means then had a pair of black and a pair of brown high shoes, and possibly a pair of black satin pumps and also oxfords, That was a good-sized shoe equipment for .a well-dressed woman. Today RE -- entitled | fifteen pairs of shoes are not unus- ual for women of moderate means, and twenty-five pairs are not enough to accuse a' woman of ex- travagance, when it takes a special shoe to go with every costume, De- spite rumors that we are living in an age of simplicity, shoes are more decorative and ornat than ever be- fore. Many arc delicately lined with pink 'satin; tiny beads of steel and pearl are not uncommon on the more claborate = models, Printed silks and linens are stepping along in handsome sports shoes ,and an importation of Perugia sandals is something no shoe fancier should miss, A well-known cobbler, in the town ol ahmarnock, having occasion to pass the door of a public-house, just as Boniface was endeavoring to lift a poor, helpless 'inebriate from the gutter, was greeted with: "Hey, mon, come here and gie us a lift," "Na, na, returned toe knight of Saint Crispin, "ye can jist dae as 1 dae, when I'm finished wi' a job I allus put it in the window." "Are you married yet or are you : around with those chor- us girls?" X CS. | same thoroug be got with Palmolive." allowed to remain clogged suffer and lose all their vitality." S"T7HE first step of a beauty specialist," says M. Fontaine, "is to see that the skin is in a condition to respond to treatment in the Salon, If the pores are ; Fo indefi- nitely with particles o er, rouge, fine dust, gs god gran ® tah skin des a In bis shop opposite the Cathe- dral in Brussels Fontaine has women of the European aris- tocracy. Here be bas received, with pride, warrants from the Queen and from such dignitaries as Madame la Princesse Napo- acted as beauty advisor to lovely ° Massage the skin for two minutes with Palmolive lather; rinse, first with warm water, then with cold. That's all. Its simplicity is one reason why Palmolive is the most popular facial treatment all over the world, leon . . . . proclaiming him official Fournissenr," as was bis father, Fontaine pere, Jince the year 1866. beauty FONTAINE of Brussels Beauty Specialist to Royalty advises this new way to "Palm and olive oils are the best natural skin cleansers. It is a mistake to suppose that the 4 cleansing can other means. That is why I always insist that before my preparations are ied, the Fig must first be he nin Ch Wy At 25 Rue Ste. Gudule, is the salon df beaxyd of Fontaine, ty Pecialist by appoint- ment To Her Majesty, the \ Queen of the Belgians, . SE PA Moy, PALMOLIVE SOAP %10¢ : --By Grace G. Draytor Special orders taken for Bridal outfits, Reasonable The Fashion ry Simcoe 3 Shove renewing old acquaintanc®s at Old Home Week. ! "Law-zee, Rastus, whut's "at?" asked Mandy when they came to the zebra. "Don't you know, gal? + You sho' has neglected your animology. Dat's nuffin 'but a spo't model jackass.'-- Belleville Ontario, DOLLY DIMPLES AND BOBBY BOUNCE *x * x Mr. W. Ebert, Division street, was among the numerous Oshawa people attending Old Home Week in Peterboro this week. NOBODY KNOows BUT 4 Deolly-BoBy AND COMFY THAT I AM REALLY A BABY CHICKEN TURNED ! INTO A RABBIT BY THE MAGIC POWDER AND BECAUSE I LOGT THE MAGIC POWDER: 1 HAVE TO STAY A Bunty, UNTIL 1 FIND IT AGA eee Ty = CHEEP. CHEEP-DoLly- I'M FRIGHTENED - IT'S A NORPULL BIG, ROUGH POND COME ON CHEERY STAY CLOSE TO ME- LLL TAKE CARE OF You r-- =O LLON INSTITUTE OF INDUSTRIAL, AA rp | Let science help you keep your home free from flies, mosquitoes, moths and other insects. A vast army of Insects Is bred in FLY-TOX laboratories to be released in the FLY.TOX "Chamber of Death" to test and certify the positive killing qualities of FLY.TOX before it is sold to you. FLY.TOX is harmless to people, will not stain, and has a new purifying, perfumeslike fragrence. 20m Ad Ml; P Ti ahd © 190, Kisg Prattven Syadients, ne, Groat Britain rights served ay CH Y LIKED THE THOUGHT OF EVERYTHING nal ed Sor iA BATTING «BUT \T id 5 { |NIBBLER LWED IN SUCH A CUTE HOBSE: |T | THE. MORNING AFTER THEIR ARRINAL: TH CHEEPY- HAD NEVER SEEN ANYTHING SISSER So To SAY so. J LAS NERY Hidu War STARTED GAILY FOR BEACH... | [THAN A POND AND THE OCEAN SCARED HIM